Interrupts While a calculation is in progress, you can generate the SIGINT signal, and the calculator will catch it. At appropriate points within a calculation, the calculator will check that the signal has been given, and will abort the calculation cleanly. If the calculator is in the middle of a large calculation, it might be a while before the interrupt has an effect. You can generate the SIGINT signal multiple times if necessary, and each time the calculator will abort the calculation at a more risky place within the calculation. Each new interrupt prints a message of the form: [Abort level n] where n ranges from 1 to 3. For n equal to 1, the calculator will abort calculations at the next statement boundary specified by an ABORT opcode as described below. For n equal to 2, the calculator will abort calculations at the next opcode boundary. For n equal to 3, the calculator will abort calculations at the next attempt to allocate memory for the result of an integer arithmetic operation; this level may be appropriate for stopping a builtin operation like inversion of a large matrix. If a final interrupt is given when n is 3, the calculator will immediately abort the current calculation and longjmp back to the top level command level. Doing this may result in corrupted data structures and unpredictable future behavior, and so should only be done as a last resort. You are advised to quit the calculator after this has been done. ABORT opcodes If config("trace") & 2 is zero, ABORT opcodes are introduced at various places in the opcodes for evaluation of command lines and functions defined by "define ... { ... }" commands. In the following, config("trace") has been set equal to 8 so that opcodes are displayed when a function is defined. The function f(x) evaluates x + (x - 1) + (x - 2) + ... until a zero term is encountered. If f() is called with a negative or fractional x, the calculation is never completed and to stop it, an interruption (on many systems, by ctrl-C) will be necessary. ; config("trace", 8), ; define f(x) {local s; while (x) {s += x--} return s} 0: DEBUG line 2 2: PARAMADDR x 4: JUMPZ 19 6: DEBUG line 2 8: LOCALADDR s 10: DUPLICATE 11: PARAMADDR x 13: POSTDEC 14: POP 15: ADD 16: ASSIGNPOP 17: JUMP 2 19: DEBUG line 2 21: LOCALADDR s 23: RETURN f(x) defined (The line number following DEBUG refers to the line in the file from which the definition is read.) If an attempt is made to evaluate f(-1), the effect of the DEBUG at opcode 6 ensures that a single SIGINT will stop the calculation at a start of {s += x--} loop. In interactive mode, with ^C indicating input of ctrl-C, the displayed output is as in: ; f(-1) ^C [Abort level 1] "f": line 2: Calculation aborted at statement boundary The DEBUG opcodes are disabled by nonzero config("trace") & 2. Changing config("trace") to achieve this, and defining g(x) with the same definition as for f(x) gives: ; define g(x) {local s; while (x) {s += x--} return s} 0: PARAMADDR x 2: JUMPZ 15 4: LOCALADDR s 6: DUPLICATE 7: PARAMADDR x 9: POSTDEC 10: POP 11: ADD 12: ASSIGNPOP 13: JUMP 0 15: LOCALADDR s 17: RETURN g(x) defined If g(-1) is called, two interrupts are necessary, as in: ; g(-1) ^C [Abort level 1] ^C [Abort level 2] "g": Calculation aborted in opcode ## Copyright (C) 1999-2006 David I. Bell, Landon Curt Noll and Ernest Bowen ## ## Calc is open software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under ## the terms of the version 2.1 of the GNU Lesser General Public License ## as published by the Free Software Foundation. ## ## Calc is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ## ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY ## or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU Lesser General ## Public License for more details. ## ## A copy of version 2.1 of the GNU Lesser General Public License is ## distributed with calc under the filename COPYING-LGPL. You should have ## received a copy with calc; if not, write to Free Software Foundation, Inc. ## 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA. ## ## @(#) $Revision: 30.1 $ ## @(#) $Id: interrupt,v 30.1 2007/03/16 11:10:42 chongo Exp $ ## @(#) $Source: /usr/local/src/bin/calc/help/RCS/interrupt,v $ ## ## Under source code control: 1991/07/21 04:37:21 ## File existed as early as: 1991 ## ## chongo /\oo/\ http://www.isthe.com/chongo/ ## Share and enjoy! :-) http://www.isthe.com/chongo/tech/comp/calc/